NAND Flash – 11 Myths Still Floating Around

Think You Know NAND Flash?

NAND flash has become the de facto memory standard in the years since Toshiba first introduced it almost three decades ago. However, many misconceptions remain to this day about its use. A wide variety of NAND flash-memory products are available, all with significantly different features and capabilities.

All NAND flash has the same interface.

NAND flash, introduced by Toshiba more than 20 years ago, is available in both the asynchronous and toggle-mode interfaces. The original asynchronous interface is found mostly in lower-density devices (<32 Gb), while high-density NAND flash (≥64 Gb) is typically used in the toggle-mode interface.( http://glewengineering.com/tester-prober-interfaces-direct-probe-part-1/

UFS memory is primarily just for smartphones.

Universal Flash Storage (UFS), while smartphones are driving significant growth, many of the same applications that adopted e.MMC are now starting to adopt UFS into their designs to take advantage of its higher performance. With Embedded MultiMediaCard, or e.MMC, smartphones were a key driver for adoption, but the breadth and variety of applications soon exploded to include tablets, games, e-readers, cameras, streaming-media devices, printers, servers, wearable devices, automotive infotainment, and more.

e-MMC and UFS aren’t suited for automotive.

The memory-storage requirements for automotive continue to increase, especially due to the growing connectivity in vehicles and advances in autonomous driving capabilities. Entertainment, maps, driver-assist functions and more all require more memory storage, which is the bailiwick for embedded memory such as e.MMC (Fig. 1). Likewise, automotive will adopt UFS because it brings enhanced performance. http://glewengineering.com/led-lighting-daylight-now-in-a-headlight/)

If the host processor doesn’t have a built-in ECC engine, it’s still possible to use NAND flash. While plain or raw NAND devices require the host to implement ECC, many NAND flash products feature built-in error-correction capability like serial NAND, e.MMC, UFS, and BENAND If the host processor doesn’t have a built-in ECC engine, it’s still possible to use NAND flash. While plain or raw NAND devices require the host to implement ECC, many NAND flash products feature built-in error-correction capability like serial NAND, e.MMC, UFS, and BENAND.

Data in NAND flash always lasts at least one year.

The data retention of NAND flash comes down to four main factors: the temperature, the number of write/erase cycles to a block, the ECC, and the type of memory cell—e.g., single-level cell (SLC), multi-level cell (MLC), or triple-level cell (TLC). While the nominal data-retention specification for NAND flash is one year, that’s only when at a specific temperature, write/erase cycle limit, and ECC requirement. The write/erase cycle limit is different for SLC, MLC, and TLC devices, as well as the ECC.

NOR flash is for code storage and NAND flash is for data storage.

This was once the basic rule of thumb because NOR flash had faster random-access speeds for reading and NAND flash had lower bit cost and faster programming speeds. Microcontrollers executed random code from NOR flash via a separate address and data bus.

UFS will never surpass e.MMC demand, but if it does, e.MMC will quickly go away.

UFS is quickly being adopted by high-end smartphones, including many models launching this year, and will migrate to mid-tier phones soon after. To fully take advantage of the UFS-supported faster interface, UFS is primarily targeted for densities of 32 GB and higher, since fast sequential write speeds are enabled by interleaving multiple NAND die, which can only cost-effectively be implemented at higher densities. (http://glewengineering.com/materials-science-news-2-d-phosphorus-the-future-for-solar-cells/)

Once detecting the initial factory-marked bad blocks and making sure they’re not.

There will be a few blocks that fail over time—sometimes called grown bad blocks. While the percentage of good blocks that fail before the maximum number of write/erase cycles is low (on the order of 0.1%), since the number of grown bad blocks is not zero, the flash-management software must be able to retire blocks.

While these were the specifications of NAND flash years ago, this is no longer accurate since many lithography generations have passed. Typical SLC NAND flash has an endurance of 50-60k cycles (24-nm generation) and MLC NAND flash has an endurance of 3k cycles (15-nm generation).

Everyone that makes NAND flash follows the ONFi standard.

The Open NAND Flash Interface (ONFi) standard was created by a consortium of companies that make NAND flash. However, Toshiba (the inventor of NAND flash), and Samsung never joined ONFi. The Joint Electron Device Engineering Council(JEDEC) has since unified the Toshiba/Samsung toggle-mode standard and the ONFi standard, so there’s now good compatibility for modern NAND devices.

NAND flash is only available in the parallel asynchronous or toggle-mode interface.

Conclusion:

Hope you enjoyed reading about the 11 Myths Still Floating Around about NAND Flash. NAND flash is currently the most suitable solution for nonvolatile storage in embedded applications and it is gaining access to in safety critical applications, thanks to their high storage density, low power, low cost, and high data throughput.